Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Ex- UConn star, top NBA sixth man

- By Brian Mahoney

Cliff Robinson guided the University of Connecticu­t out from the bottom and almost helped take the Portland Trail Blazers to the top.

He was one of the National Basketball Associatio­n’s best sixth men, a versatile player who became a predecesso­r of the modern center.

Not bad for a guy who was warned that he might not even get a second season in Storrs.

“He averaged 5 points as a freshman, and I remember I told him, ‘ You have two choices: I can kick you out if you keep doing what you do, or I’m going to watch you play a lot of years in the NBA,’ ” former UConn coach Jim Calhoun said. “He chose the latter, which was good.”

Mr. Robinson died Saturday at 53, remembered as much for his personalit­y as his skills by the teams he played for during an 18- year career.

“His personalit­y and energy were unmatched, and his contributi­ons on the court were unmistakab­le, helping the Trail Blazers into the playoffs each of his eight seasons with the team,” the Blazers said.

“His streak of 461 consecutiv­e games played with the Trail Blazers still stands as a franchise record, which is a testament to his hard work and dedication to the team. . ... Uncle Cliffy will be greatly missed by the Trail Blazers and all of Rip City.”

No cause of death was given, though Mr. Calhoun said Mr. Robinson had a stroke 2 ½ years ago and had gone into a coma earlier this month.

“It’s really sad to hear of this, because he was one of my kids, my players, a guy I watched grow into a man,” Mr. Calhoun said. “It’s not an easy thing.”

A moment of silence was held for Mr. Robinson, as well as Arizona coach Lute Olson and actor Chadwick Boseman, before the start of Saturday night’s NBA playoff game between Milwaukee and Orlando.

Mr. Robinson helped the Blazers reach the NBA Finals in 1990 and 1992. He not only never missed the postseason in Portland but hardly missed any games at all, playing all 82 in each of his first five seasons and never appearing in fewer than 75.

“RIP Clifford Robinson — some of my earliest memories of NBA basketball were of you as the lifeblood to those early/ mid-’ 90s Blazers teams. The Memorial Coliseum days!! RIP to a Portland legend,” tweeted Cleveland star Kevin Love, who grew up in Oregon.

Clifford Robinson was born on Dec. 16, 1966, in Buffalo, N. Y.

He picked UConn over Syracuse and Oklahoma and became the centerpiec­e of Mr. Calhoun’s early teams.

He played in Storrs from 1985- 89, helping guide the Huskies from the bottom of the Big East to the 1988 National Invitation Tournament championsh­ip.

Mr. Robinson averaged just 5.6 points as a freshman but scored 20 a game as a senior before becoming a second- round pick of the Blazers. His No. 00 hangs on the wall at Gampel Pavilion as an original member of the Huskies of Honor.

Mr. Robinson was fourth on UConn’s career scoring list when he left but down to No. 13 now, showing how strong the program he helped rise up became.

“He was our first great player,” Mr. Calhoun said. “He gave legitimacy to the program.

“As a player coming in, here’s this guy playing on TV for the Trail Blazers, watching him play, watching UConn being mentioned. You could not pay for the exposure that he gave us.”

Mr. Robinson was the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year in 1993 and made his lone All- Star appearance the following year. At 6foot- 11, he had the size of a center but was a skilled outside shooter.

He played 1,380 games in the league, ranking in the top 15 all- time.

Besides the Blazers, Mr. Robinson also played for Phoenix, Detroit, Golden State and the Nets.

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Cliff Robinson

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